Huddersfield University, UK.
WoundCareSol Consultancy, UK.
J Wound Care. 2021 Apr 2;30(4):284-296. doi: 10.12968/jowc.2021.30.4.284.
Traditionally, infections are treated with antimicrobials (for example, antibiotics, antiseptics, etc), but antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has become one of the most serious health threats of the 21st century (before the emergence of COVID-19). Wounds can be a source of infection by allowing unconstrained entry of microorganisms into the body, including antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. The development of new antimicrobials (particularly antibiotics) is not keeping pace with the evolution of resistant microorganisms and novel ways of addressing this problem are urgently required. One such initiative has been the development of antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) programmes, which educate healthcare workers, and control the prescribing and targeting of antimicrobials to reduce the likelihood of AMR. Of great importance has been the European Wound Management Association (EWMA) in supporting AMS by providing practical recommendations for optimising antimicrobial therapy for the treatment of wound infection. The use of wound dressings that use a physical sequestration and retention approach rather than antimicrobial agents to reduce bacterial burden offers a novel approach that supports AMS. Bacterial-binding by dressings and their physical removal, rather than active killing, minimises their damage and hence prevents the release of damaging endotoxins.
Our objective is to highlight AMS for the promotion of the judicious use of antimicrobials and to investigate how dialkylcarbamoyl chloride (DACC)-coated dressings can support AMS goals.
MEDLINE, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and Google Scholar were searched to identify published articles describing data relating to AMS, and the use of a variety of wound dressings in the prevention and/or treatment of wound infections. The evidence supporting alternative wound dressings that can reduce bioburden and prevent and/or treat wound infection in a manner that does not kill or damage the microorganisms (for example, by actively binding and removing intact microorganisms from wounds) were then narratively reviewed.
The evidence reviewed here demonstrates that using bacterial-binding wound dressings that act in a physical manner (for example, DACC-coated dressings) as an alternative approach to preventing and/or treating infection in both acute and hard-to-heal wounds does not exacerbate AMR and supports AMS.
Some wound dressings work via a mechanism that promotes the binding and physical uptake, sequestration and removal of intact microorganisms from the wound bed (for example, a wound dressing that uses DACC technology to successfully prevent/reduce infection). They provide a valuable tool that aligns with the requirements of AMS (for example, reducing the use of antimicrobials in wound treatment regimens) by effectively reducing wound bioburden without inducing/selecting for resistant bacteria.
传统上,感染是通过使用抗菌药物(例如抗生素、防腐剂等)来治疗的,但抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)已成为 21 世纪最严重的健康威胁之一(在 COVID-19 出现之前)。伤口可能成为感染源,因为它允许微生物不受限制地进入体内,包括具有抗药性的细菌。新型抗菌药物(尤其是抗生素)的开发速度跟不上耐药微生物的进化速度,因此迫切需要新的方法来解决这个问题。抗菌药物管理(AMS)计划就是其中的一项举措,它教育医护人员,控制抗菌药物的开具和靶向使用,以降低 AMR 的可能性。欧洲伤口管理协会(EWMA)通过为优化治疗伤口感染的抗菌药物治疗提供实用建议,为 AMS 提供了重要支持。使用通过物理隔离和保留方法而不是抗菌剂来减少细菌负担的伤口敷料提供了一种支持 AMS 的新方法。敷料对细菌的结合及其物理去除(而不是主动杀伤)可将其损害降至最低,从而防止破坏性内毒素的释放。
我们的目的是强调 AMS 以促进抗菌药物的合理使用,并探讨二烷基碳酰氯(DACC)涂层敷料如何支持 AMS 目标。
检索 MEDLINE、Cochrane 系统评价数据库和 Google Scholar,以确定描述与 AMS 相关数据的已发表文章,并调查各种伤口敷料在预防和/或治疗伤口感染方面的应用。然后,我们对可减少生物负荷并以不杀伤或损害微生物的方式预防和/或治疗伤口感染的替代伤口敷料的证据进行了叙述性综述。
这里综述的证据表明,使用通过物理方式起作用的细菌结合伤口敷料(例如 DACC 涂层敷料)作为预防和/或治疗急性和难愈伤口感染的替代方法,不会加剧 AMR 并支持 AMS。
一些伤口敷料通过促进将完整的微生物从伤口床中结合、物理摄取、隔离和去除的机制发挥作用(例如,使用 DACC 技术成功预防/减少感染的伤口敷料)。它们提供了一种有价值的工具,通过有效减少伤口生物负荷而不诱导/选择耐药细菌,符合 AMS 的要求(例如,减少伤口治疗方案中抗菌药物的使用)。